Write your inquiry question here, with as much detail as possible.
My Smaller Questions:
Break your big question down into smaller, easier-to-research questions to help guide your research.
My Note-Taking:
Transcribe your research notes here. This is a great place to start organizing your ideas - feel free to move things around. Don't forget that each note will need something telling you which website or source it came from - it's up to you how you do this! You could use a symbol or a short form of the website title or address here (as long as you have the full title and address recorded below!).
Examples:
- This point I thought was very interesting. (dogs.com)
- However, this one was interesting as well. ***
My Research Journal:
Every time you work on your project, you should include a short journal entry recording what worked, what didn't, how you are feeling about the project, do you need to go back and change anything, etc.
Example:
Sun, April 4th - I was really pleased with the cats.com website. It gave me lots of information to help me answer some of my smaller questions. However, I still can't find enough information to really answer my inquiry question. Maybe I should think about revising it.
My Sources:
Please cite your sources using PROPER bibliographical format. What does that mean, you say?
Author. "Title of Article." Title of Website. Date written. Date accessed. <URL>.
If you can't find the author, date, or article title, just leave that part out.
Final Written Report and Glog:
After you have written, revised, edited, and published your final report draft, copy it here. Make sure the paragraphs are formatted correctly.
Once you have completed your project Glog, add it as a widget in this section. Congratulations! You're done, and you have a research project to be proud of!
[Title of Project]
by [Your Name]
My Question:
Write your inquiry question here, with as much detail as possible.
My Smaller Questions:
Break your big question down into smaller, easier-to-research questions to help guide your research.
My Note-Taking:
Transcribe your research notes here. This is a great place to start organizing your ideas - feel free to move things around. Don't forget that each note will need something telling you which website or source it came from - it's up to you how you do this! You could use a symbol or a short form of the website title or address here (as long as you have the full title and address recorded below!).
Examples:
- This point I thought was very interesting. (dogs.com)
- However, this one was interesting as well. ***
My Research Journal:
Every time you work on your project, you should include a short journal entry recording what worked, what didn't, how you are feeling about the project, do you need to go back and change anything, etc.
Example:
Sun, April 4th - I was really pleased with the cats.com website. It gave me lots of information to help me answer some of my smaller questions. However, I still can't find enough information to really answer my inquiry question. Maybe I should think about revising it.
My Sources:
Please cite your sources using PROPER bibliographical format. What does that mean, you say?
Author. "Title of Article." Title of Website. Date written. Date accessed. <URL>.
Example:
Anelli, Melissa. "Vault Entry #4: Spoiler Stories." Harry, A History. October 14, 2008. March 29, 2010. <http://harryahistory.com/2008/10/vault-entry-4-spoiler-stories.html>.
If you can't find the author, date, or article title, just leave that part out.
Final Written Report and Glog:
After you have written, revised, edited, and published your final report draft, copy it here. Make sure the paragraphs are formatted correctly.
Once you have completed your project Glog, add it as a widget in this section. Congratulations! You're done, and you have a research project to be proud of!